The Mercury News

Will removal ceremony close Fallon statue saga?

- Contact Sal Pizarro at spizarro@bayareanew­sgroup.com.

Drivers stopped near Julian Street and Highway 87 in downtown San Jose on Friday morning may have wondered what was happening on the concrete island near the ramps. Were the 50 or so people there gathered in protest or celebratio­n? A little bit of both, actually.

The event was led by members of the Muwekma Ohlone tribe and Centro Aztlan Chicomozto­c at the former site of a statue of Thomas Fallon, an early San Jose mayor, and a companion on horseback raising the U.S. flag over San Jose. After more than three decades as a controvers­ial flashpoint in the city, the statue was removed this past spring and put into storage. The groups called for a ritual cleansing of the site, which they say symbolized genocide and white supremacy.

Muwekma Ohlone Chairwoman Charlene Nijmeh, who led the solemn ceremony along with tribal dancer Joey Torres, said the spiritual cleansing of the area would be followed by mobilizati­on “to put in an installati­on that reflects us all.” The ceremony, attended by San Jose City Councilmem­bers Peter Ortiz and Omar Torres, was followed by a procession that stopped at Plaza de Cesar Chavez and ended at St. James Park.

A contingent of people against the statue’s removal have argued it simply represente­d a moment in the city’s history and did not glorify colonizati­on (a charge that falls on Spain, not the U.S., in California’s case). Others — including myself, a San Jose native of mostly Mexican descent — weren’t offended by the statue but thought commission­ing it without community input was wrong. And I’m willing to bet most of San Jose’s nearly 1 million residents rarely — if ever — noticed it.

But some folks, like Kathy Chavez Na

poli have been actively opposing the statue since its inception. Chavez Napoli ran for San Jose mayor in 1994 and 1998 and is now a member of the Gavilan Community College District board of trustees. She was there Friday, too, and reminded the crowd that the statue was never destroyed (an action the city council was unable to order because artist Robert Glen wouldn’t agree to it). That was her recommenda­tion, but she doesn’t think it should have been hidden away, either.

“If it’s going to be placed somewhere, it should be placed at the historical museum here in San Jose so our story could be told about the Latino community, the Chicano community, the Native community,” she said. “We need to have that story, our voices told. So over 30 years later, we’re still fighting and we’ll continue to fight.”

Chavez Napoli says the statue should never have been built to begin with. Looking back at the anguish, controvers­y and cost over three decades, it’s hard to disagree.

BRUNCHING WITH CHEF GATOR » It’s been great to see Chef Glenn “Gator” Thompson back doing his thing for Mama Kin in downtown San Jose. As someone who loved his Southern food at Bayonne (where Petiscos now rules on South First Street) over a decade ago, seeing him back in a kitchen was good for my soul — though not so much for my waistline.

Mama Kin’s been experiment­ing with a weekend Boogie Brunch this summer from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., with a Southern and Cajun menu that’s worth checking out. Thompson says he’s got big plans for Mama Kin’s dinner menu, too, and hopes to make it as much a destinatio­n for dining as for music.

SETTING THE STAGE » San Jose Playhouse’s Scott and Shannon Guggenheim were surprised to see The Washington Post had used the set design for their new live production “Thanks for Playing! The Game Show Show” as the background for TikTok videos about COVID-19 boosters. They don’t mind the appreciati­on but hope audiences come see the set in person at 3Below Theaters before the comedy closes its run on Aug. 20. You can get tickets at www.sanjosepla­yhouse.org.

And if you’re checking your calendar, City Lights Theater Company’s exuberant production of “Kinky Boots” has been extended until Aug. 27. The musical features San Jose resident Ricardo Cortés in his third role this season for City Lights: He had a standout scene selling tamales in “Miss You Like Hell,” showed his mysterious side as a man with a secret in “The River Bride” and is wrapping up the season as a sassy drag entertaine­r.

GOOD DEED DEPT. » Soccer fans were disappoint­ed when the Barcelona vs. Juventus match at Levi’s Stadium was canceled abruptly in late July. But it also left a ton of food that was going to go unsold. Fortunatel­y, Hunger at Home stepped in with its food rescue program and distribute­d that as 1,400 boxed lunches and more than 30 trays of food filled with carnitas, chicken, fruit and vegetables. Does that count as a goal or a save?

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 ?? SAL PIZARRO — STAFF ?? A crowd watches a Muwekma Ohlone cleansing ceremony at the former site of a statue of Thomas Fallon, an early San Jose mayor, raising the U.S. flag, in downtown San Jose on Friday.
SAL PIZARRO — STAFF A crowd watches a Muwekma Ohlone cleansing ceremony at the former site of a statue of Thomas Fallon, an early San Jose mayor, raising the U.S. flag, in downtown San Jose on Friday.

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